Friday, 5 October 2018

Ramon Magsaysay Award Winner at R C Bombay West

Dr.Bharat Vatwani

The
Chief Guest at our regular Club Meeting of Wednesday 3rd October
2018 was the recent Ramon Magsaysay Award Winner – Dr.Bharat Vatwani, a
renowned Psychiatrist and Founder Chairman of Shraddha Rehabilitation
Foundation – an organization devoted to the wandering mentally ill people
we often see on the streets and ignore. DG Shashi Sharma and Dr.Mohanbhai Patel graced the occasion as Guests of Honour while Dr.Anjali Chabria and several visiting Rotarians, Rotaractors and Guests were present to hear Dr.Bharat Vatwani and get inspiration from his work.

DG Shashi Sharma

The
Ramon Magsaysay awards, considered as Asia’s Nobel Prize, were established in
1957 to commemorate Ramon Magsaysay, the late
president of Philippines. In the past six decades this award has been bestowed
on over 300 outstanding men, women and organizations whose selfless service has
provided solutions to some of the most uncivilized problems of human
development. In being honoured with this award Dr. Bharat Vatwani joins other
illustrious Indian awardees such as Vinobha Bhave, Mother Teresa and Jayprakash
Narayan to name a few.

Dr.Anjali Chabria

The citation presented to Dr. Bharat
Vatwani at the awards ceremony reads “ The Foundation recognizes his tremendous
courage and healing compassion in embracing India’s mentally-afflicted
destitute and his steadfast and magnanimous work in restoring and affirming the
human dignity of even the most ostracized in our midst”.

Born in June 1958, the journey for Dr Bharat
Vatwani, an MD in Psychiatry began in 1987, when he and
his wife Smita, also a practicing psychiatrist, spotted a frail young man
drinking water from a gutter. The couple took him to their nursing home in
Borivali. Treated him and reunited him with his family in Andhra Pradesh. It
turned out that the young man was a BSc graduate suffering from schizophrenia. Ten years later in 1988 Dr. Vatwani along with his wife conceptualized
and founded Shraddha Rehabilitation Foundation, to provide temporary custodial
carefor road side destitute schizophrenia
patients. The major mission of this foundation since inception has been the
rescue, treatment, rehabilitation and reunification with their families of the
wandering mentally ill destitute from the streets of India. This couple also helped
a well-known professor also suffering from schizophrenia
from JJ School of Art, who was wandering on Mumbai roads for over two years.
After his treatment, Dr Vatwani fought for him to get his job back. This
triggered an overwhelming response from art students, who organized a fund
raiser art exhibition for Dr. Vatwani’s cause. With the
proceeds from this exhibition coupled with the help of various donors, what
started as a two room tenement in 1988 treating a few destitute at a time, Dr.
Vatwani now established a separate psychiatric institution with a capacity of
20 beds at Dahisar in 1997.

Dr.Vatwani being felicitated by the Club

However,
not all was easy going. The residents of Dahisar resisted and took Shraddha to court for picking up roadside,
psychiatrically disturbing elements that they perceived threatened their
families with a bad influence. In a landmark judgment, this much abused section
of society, found its lawful place under the sun. “The mentally ill roadside destitute”
- emphasized the Mumbai High Court are as much entitled to medical help as any
physically indisposed person.

Finally
in 2006, a separate facility in 6.5 acres was created on the outskirts of
Mumbai on the undulating grassy knolls of Karjat. It currently has a capacity
to house 120 patients. To ensure absolute focus, the entire activity is totally
free to the patients and the institute only caters to destitute wandering
helplessly on the streets. No patient brought in by relatives is accepted at
this institute by the foundation.

During
the last 3 decades, more than 7000 mentally-ill roadside destitute have been
assisted off the roads, treated, rehabilitated and reunited with their families
in far flung villages and towns of Indian stretching from Kerala to Assam. More
specifically, after the initiation of the Karjat project in 2006, close to 5500
mentally ill roadside destitute have been reunited with their families.

On
a more personal level, this dedicated husband & wife team are blessed with
4 children. A biological daughter named Akshaa and 3 children adopted from
Mother Teresa’s home, 2 sons named Arjun and Karmanya, and one daughter named
Kanika. This couple truly symbolizes Our Rotary motto of “Service above Self”.